patrix + regulation   7

A Fair Auto Fare
Unfortunately the system in most cities in India is broken, and most notably so in Chennai. The government-mandated meter is never switched on, and the passenger has to negotiate the fare upfront before boarding. Residents of the city consider the system to be highly overpriced, and a significant section doesn’t even venture to travel by it. In Bangalore and Mumbai, rickshaws refuse to ply to areas from where they are unlikely to get onward passengers, and in a number of cities, it is rumoured that the number of autos on the road far exceeds the number of licenses issued.


Reforming any form of dispersed and piecemeal transportation utilities is a gargantuan task in India.
transportation  rickshaw  Chennai  India  regulation  upb 
january 2012 by patrix
The Transportation Planning Rule Every City Should Reform
The source of the disconnect between San Francisco's transit-first heart and its car-centric hand is an arcane engineering measure called "level of service," or LOS. In brief, LOS suggests that whenever the city wants to change some element of a street — say by adding a bike lane or even just painting a crosswalk — it should calculate the effect that change will have on car traffic. If the change produces too much congestion, then a great deal of time, money, and additional analysis must go toward the project's consideration.
transportation  reform  regulation  upb 
december 2011 by patrix
A reality check on Jobs' 3G network complaint
"When AT&T wants to add a cell tower in, oh, Texas or somewhere, it takes three weeks to get approval in a typical community. To get a cell phone tower in San Francisco, it takes something like three years."

Where are the libertarians ranting against government regulation when you need them?
Apple  SanFrancisco  cellphones  network  regulation  pb 
july 2010 by patrix
High-speed railroading
"America’s system of rail freight is the world’s best. High-speed passenger trains could ruin it."

It may be a choice between lower prices thanks to efficient freight transport and reliable & better passenger transport. How willing are we to make the tradeoff?
train  railways  transportation  government  regulation  upb 
july 2010 by patrix
Apple iPhone 4 Antennas
"Just about every cell phone in current production has the antenna located at the bottom.  This insures that the radiating portion of the antenna is furthest from the head.  Apple was not the first to locate the antenna on the bottom, and certainly won't be the last.  The problem is that humans have their hands below their ears, so the most natural position for the hand is covering the antenna.  This can't be a good design decision, can it?  How can we be stuck with this conundrum?  It's the FCC's fault."

However, this does not excuse Apple's excuses of not holding the phone right. If a cover potentially solves the problem then it should be included with the phone. Otherwise lobby the FCC to get rid of this stupid requirement.
iphone  apple  cellular  FCC  regulation  pb 
june 2010 by patrix
Officials Sue Couple Who Removed Their Lawn
Where are the tea parties protesting against this stupid government action?
#pb  pb  WTF  government  regulation  environment  from twitter
march 2010 by patrix

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